The Quit
So as soon as I could I proudly made the announcement I had stopped smoking through Facebook knowing as I did, I would get tons of well wishes. Maybe they would come in the form of happy faces I pondered as I waited for a comment to appear or maybe even a “we’re with you gal,” underneath their pictures.
So you can imagine my disappointment when I only received a couple of “Likes”. I waited for some comments but after receiving none, realized Facebook was cold and unresponsive. I turned to my trusty pen and paper and waited for inspiration knowing that once it began the result would bring me pleasure and support.
But nothing came as I sat there day by day. No words, no inspiration, no story. Was it because of my cigarettes? Was it because I had lost the study buddy I leaned against during college exams? My gift of strength when one Christmas my husband decided to abandon our marriage and family? The coping mechanism I used when laid off from my employment?
So many questions that needed to be answered as well as feelings that needed to be expressed. Like how euphoric I felt at first quitting smoking because I had proven my asshole friends and family wrong and quit. How this joy transferred into bargaining when I decided I would only smoke when I was writing. But then turned to anger the night I pulled up into the convenience store parking lot intent on buying a pack and then turned around at the door when I realized I had already passed the 10 day mark. And then settled on a deep depression when my fingers felt tried typing on the computer keys and found they were stiff and lifeless.
But then lo and behold I received via email a 28 day journaling challenge. Journaling, I thought as I excited opened the email, would require me not to type a story or even a paragraph but to hand write on paper just my stupid thoughts and emotions.
It was slow at first without my cigarettes but I found in the next 28 days a new best friend—my journal. I told it how I felt I was going out of my mind with the mood swings created by not smoking anymore. I vented about my jerk family and friend members who somehow remembered I smoked but forgot to congratulate me on quitting. I screamed into it how I wanted a cigarette. I bargained with every approach until one day I realized I was writing and without cigarette!
Suzanne lives in State College, has her Bachelor’s of Arts in English from the University of Wisconsin with a minor in Journalism, attended the prestigious Yale University Writer’s Conference, and has been published in regional newspapers and magazines.
Suzanne can be reached at writersuzannesteele@gmail.com, writersuzannesteele.wordpress.com, Facebook-Suzanne Steele, Twitter-@writersuzannest, and Tumblr-writer suzanne steele.
Blog Image: NBC/Universal (from the Grimm series)